Re: Dumb linker/loader question

On Sat, 15 Jan 2005 10:40:31 -0800
walt <wa1ter@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> Context: I told Joerg I would work on a port override for the
> ksysguard component of kdebase3. As expected, I'm running up
> against my own ignorance of how the dynamic library system works.
>
> I've modified the C code in ksysguard to use kinfo.h instead of
> dkstat.h (per Joerg's instructions). The modified code compiles
> and installs without error.
>
> What mystifies me is that the installed program is *not* linked
> against the necessary libkinfo.so. The reason is no mystery:
> I never modified any Makefile or linker flags which would do
> the necessary linking.
>
> The mystery (to me, at least) is why the whole build completes
> *without* libkinfo (???)
>
> I'm clearly lacking some basic understanding of how this whole
> thing works. How can code that uses the header files from a
> library compile *and* link successfully without that library?
In brief: because linking to shared objects (.so's) happens only when
the program is loaded, i.e. at runtime. It doesn't even try to link in
. so's at compile-time - it just takes it on faith that the functions
that you've said will be there (by including a header file) will in fact
be there - so it doesn't know there are unresolved symbols (missing
dependencies) until later, so everything builds without a hitch.
It's a pain sometimes, I know... :/
You'll need to pass -lkinfo somewhere in some Makefile -- look for other
-l flags, that should be a pretty good clue.
-Chris